Cost-effectiveness of a potential Zika vaccine candidate: a case study for Colombia
Authored by Affan Shoukat, Thomas Vilches, Seyed M Moghadas
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1186/s12916-018-1091-x
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Brazilian Ministry of Education (CAPES)
Canadian Foundation for Innovation
Platforms:
Julia
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/affans/zika/tree/publication
Abstract
Background: A number of Zika vaccine platforms are currently being
investigated, some of which have entered clinical trials. We sought to
evaluate the cost-effectiveness of a potential Zika vaccine candidate
under the WHO Vaccine Target Product Profile for outbreak response,
prioritizing women of reproductive age to prevent microcephaly and other
neurological disorders.
Methods: Using an agent-based simulation model of ZIKV transmission
dynamics in a Colombian population setting, we conducted
cost-effectiveness analysis with and without pre-existing herd immunity.
The model was parameterized with estimates associated with ZIKV
infection, risks of microcephaly in different trimesters, direct medical
costs, and vaccination costs. We assumed that a single dose of vaccine
provides a protection efficacy in the range 60\% to 90\% against
infection. Cost-effectiveness analysis was conducted from a government
perspective.
Results: Under a favorable scenario when the reproduction number is
relatively low (R-0 = 2.2) and the relative transmissibility of
asymptomatic infection is 10\% compared with symptomatic infection, a
vaccine is cost-saving (with negative incremental cost-effective ratio;
ICER) for vaccination costs up to US\$6 per individual without herd
immunity, and up to US\$4 per individual with 8\% herd immunity. For
positive ICER values, vaccination is highly cost-effective for
vaccination costs up to US\$10 (US\$7) in the respective scenarios with
the willingness-to-pay of US\$6610 per disability-adjusted life-year,
corresponding to the average per capita GDP of Colombia between 2013 and
2017. Our results indicate that the effect of other control measures
targeted to reduce ZIKV transmission decreases the range of vaccination
costs for cost-effectiveness due to reduced returns of vaccine-induced
herd immunity. In all scenarios investigated, the median reduction of
microcephaly exceeded 64\% with vaccination.
Conclusions: Our study suggests that a Zika vaccine with protection
efficacy as low as 60\% could significantly reduce the incidence of
microcephaly. From a government perspective, Zika vaccination is highly
cost-effective, and even cost-saving in Colombia if vaccination costs
per individual is sufficiently low. Efficacy data from clinical trials
and number of vaccine doses will be important requirements in future
studies to refine our estimates, and conduct similar studies in other
at-risk populations.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Infection
cost-effectiveness
transmission
disease
Vaccination
Infants
Texas
America
Dengue
Update
Zika
Microcephaly
Virus outbreak
Birth-defects
Pregnancy